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A good character is the best tombstone. Those who loved you and were helped by you will remember you when forget-me-nots have withered. Carve your name on hearts, not on marble.
-- Charles Spurgeon
♡ Outfit by ELEVEN - Zania Hoodie + Short
@DUBAI EVENT From DEC 20 to JAN 17
Just could not resist getting these off the hard drive to share with you all
Thank you everyone who has stopped by and commented over the past year, It is very much appreciated Happy Christmas and all you wish for in 2019
Haha...not surprisingly, I miss "my" hummingbirds! One from the archives. I like how this one looks like it's tilting his head at me. This is either a juvenile or a female Anna's hummingbird.
Like most of my hummingbird photos, this was taken while out on walks in our neighborhood. No luring of birds to a feeder!
I guess I'm going to have to plant a hummingbird garden. Maybe some Ruby-throated hummingbirds will visit me this summer.
If you missed the post on Monday, just a reminder we'd love to see you ALL there, Saturday 11/20 all day ....♥
Hi my flickr friends, Ms. Natalie Montagne, owner of Enchanted at the Elven Realm is having her Grand Opening and my fairy wings are crossed in hopes that you will all stop by and visit this beautiful and "Enchating" Sim.
So much to do and see, lots of hidden treasure. Everyone who has visited has been delighted. So wont you join Ms. Natalie (and I will be flitting about somewhere), we'd love for you to say hello and finally meet inworld.
Come and join the Fanciful Festivities, enjoy the music, and Ms. Faery Sola's latest surprise, from Studio Sidhe.
If you need LM don't hesitate to IM me.
Hugs for a great week and see you all soon. enchantedelvenrealm.blogspot.com/
LM: Elven Realm 160.154,21
Faerie Hugs
Selene
Photo: Courtesy of Faery Sola
...
well, already Friday! Huh! Yeah, another crazy week...
But another upload so I guess I am still alive :)
ps, yes I know I am way behind too...will be trying to catch up this weekend once again!
As part of the oldest generation on earth now, ours may be the last to keep old photo albums to remind us of those we had strong ties with while they were alive. Today's generation is getting quite adept at throwing out keepsakes from their parents when they pass on, including photos. Certain things yet today remind me of my days on the farm, none more than a flock of pigeons like these by this barn for they were a constant presence on our farm, cooing us awake and gently helping us sink into sleep at night.
Bundesbahn retro 218 446 zieht RE 4857 durch die aufgelassene Bahnhof Neustadt (Waldnaab). Die Bahnhof war einst die Abzweigsbahnhof die Nebenstrecke nach Eslarn. Die Strecke war Großteils 1995 Stillgelegt und später entwidmet. Heute bleibt ein kleine Reststück zum Stadtzentrum von Neustadt. Die Fuktionen die alte Bahnhof ist jetzt auf zwei zentraller gelegene Bahnhöfe, Altstadt (Waldnaab) und Neustadt (Waldnaab) geteilt.
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Retro 218 446 is seen at the head of morning RE 4857 as it passes through the abandoned station of Neustadt (Waldnaab).
In Battersea Park there are remnants of the 1951 Festival of Britain fun fair, which finally closed in 1974. A 1972 crash on the 'Big Dipper' roller coaster, in which five young people died, sealed the fate of the theme park.
A gentle reminder about copyright and intellectual property-
Ⓒ Cassidy Photography (All images in this Flickr portfolio)
While hiking back home in the Okanagan Valley after our 6 week El Camino walk in Spain I noticed this tree branch stub that has been left after the branch was sawed off. It's not perfect but I couldn't help but marvel at the similarity it has to the Scallop shell that is warn by all pilgrims walking the Camino.
Most of you will be familiar with the scene in my house before we left for vacation. Everybody was rushing with last-minute packing when I glanced at my long-neglected camera bag. I stared at it while trying to decide whether to bring the whole backpack or not. Then I heard a stern warning from the boss, "You can't bring that!" I decided to grab just the camera, my smallest tripod, and the 24-70mm because hey, you'll never know! I wasn't expecting anything for this trip because it was going to be a clan vacation, so there was no chance of getting away for some shots. Then the weather happened(intermittently rainy forecast), and I remembered I still had sunrise for myself. Then this tree happened. Then the sky happened...for four days! So this image will be a constant reminder to bring my camera as often as possible. I have to go out and shoot while I still can. Spring is upon us again. Happy days are back folks!
I bought this bracelet in the gift shop at the hosipital on the day of my Dad's heart surgery. It simply says "love is patient... love is kind... love never ends.." and repeats all the way around the bracelt. I wear it daily now... I love simple things like trinkets that remind me of special things.
And my Dad is great.. very stubborn as always but he is doing great!
A Norfolk Southern SD60 leads a westbound on the Chicago Line near sunset just east of Gary.
Reminders of the long-gone New York Central were still found in abundance back then. Today it is all gone as NS has decimated the property of the older signals with the newer Safetrans replacements.
Perhaps this beautiful moment is an encouraging reminder that it’s ok for you to stand up for yourself in an appropriate way and set and maintain healthy boundaries. Even when others have used the Bible in harmful ways toward you, making it very challenging to study and engage in, it’s amazing and refreshing how God seems to communicate with you through creation.
#NotetoSelf
[image created on 5-24-2023]
#Flickr21Challenge#21
This is just a little reminder on my ruler that I need to make a Flickr birthday card. This is not a card this is a photo for topic #21. I'm still working on the card...
“August is a gentle reminder for not doing a single thing from your new year resolution for seven months and not doing it for next five.”
― Crestless Wave
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Thanks to all for 14,000.000+ views, visits and kind comments..!!
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.
{ Explored #20 }
Song: Feist - The Limit To Your Love
...I love I love I love
This dream of going upstream
I love I love I love
All the trouble that you give me
I know I know I know
That only I can save me
I'll go I'll go I'll go
Out on the road
Because there is no limit
There's no limit
No limit no limit no limit
to my love
...to your dreams
Though I've already used this quote I still think it is a good reminder. But remember as you go through life maybe there are things that you thought would bring you happiness that don't end up doing so. It's ok to shift and let go of old ideas and dream of smaller but deeper and more meaningful ones.
Excerpt from www.watercanada.net/light-shower-towers/:
Toronto’s newest stormwater system is breathtaking.
Housed in the pavilion basement at Sherbourne Common, a new park in the city’s rapidly developing East Bayfront area, the treatment facility cleans collected storm and lake water with ultraviolet (UV) light. The treated water is then sent underground to the north side of the park where it is released through three nine-metre-high art sculpture towers. The water flows from the tops of the towers down metal mesh veils and into a 240-metre-long water channel, or urban river, where it then flows into Lake Ontario.
Artist Jill Anholt’s Light Showers water towers are lit at night; as people move over the bridge of the water channel, motion sensors trigger shifting light patterns in the water as it falls from the sculptures. The mesh veils of the art sculptures are designed to capture water in the winter to form unique ice patterns.
Regardless of its attractiveness, the system and others like it have elicited some blowback from critics, especially in a time when many municipalities are worried about growing infrastructure deficits. Are the extra features necessary? Anholt’s sculptures don’t contain UV lamps and play only a minor role in the treatment process—they provide further aeration and act as a conduit to bring treated water to raised pools.
While some people may criticize Waterfront Toronto’s choice, others believe the art is a worthwhile investment. Waterfront Toronto chair Mark Wilson sees it as a catalyst for the further development of the East Bayfront neighbourhood. “The park has already helped us attract private and public sector partners who are working with us to transform this former industrial area into a dynamic new community,” he says. The City plans to recover the cost for the art feature—$1.9 million—through development fees as part of Waterfront Toronto’s public art strategy.
Others argue that making infrastructure visible is important to public understanding. During last April’s Out of Water: Sustaining Development in Arid Climates conference at the University of Toronto. (see “In the Eye of the Beholder,” a blog post at www.wordpress-139196-653073.cloudwaysapps.com), one audience member said water infrastructure is often designed to blend with the environment. “Often, we don’t even know it’s there—but is that a good thing?” she asked. Maybe it’s important, she posited, that we see, recognize, and feel comfortable with the mechanisms that allow us to maintain the lives we’re accustomed to living and, at a basic level, survive.
During a presentation at the Ecocity World Summit this August in Montreal, Concordia University graduate student Cecilia Chen discussed the importance of mapping the flows of streams and aquifers beneath and around urban spaces to increase awareness that cities are, in some ways, nothing more than watersheds. Water’s role in an urban ecosystem, she said, goes unrecognized because it travels underground and out of sight. It’s only when a storm-drain overflows and what she calls “hybrid water” becomes visible that awareness increases.
James Roche, director, parks design and construction for Waterfront Toronto, isn’t interested in separating infrastructure, landscape, and public space. “There’s more to gain from combining these fields,” he says. Roche says we ignore water’s important, though background, role in commerce and cities. “It changes how we live on a daily basis. The Sherbourne Common design helps to bring water back into the public realm.”
Following in the tradition of projects such as Stephen Holl Architects’ Whitney Water Treatment Plant in New Haven, Connecticut—a long, stainless steel building built in an inverse-raindrop shape—and Hervé Descottes’ breathtaking lighting design for the Newtown Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant in Brooklyn, New York, Sherbourne Common serves as a reminder of the role water plays in our lives.
With a current cold snap blasting our area, our furry and feathered friends are getting an unexpected reminder that winter is on its way!
With extra Goodie Bowls set out, and frequent checking on the feeders, at least they won't go hungry. Too bad I can't provide them with little scarves and gloves, to keep those tootsies warm.
Here's a closeup of one of the Goodie Bowls with a mix that both the birds and squirrels like. I bet this little Mama is glad there's free refills at ChicaD's Backyard Buffet!
mówili że dysonanse w liściach słychać i że,
las śpiewa że,
ma dusze
dobrze skręcali swoje myśli
na sto pięćdziesiątym drugim zakręcie kierującym do ich
snów
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A&E
Port Dover has always been deeply involved in the inland fishing industry on Lake Erie, the lake which has been dubbed the world's worst tempered lake. This statue commemorates some of the fishermen from Port Dover who were lost on the lake standing at the harbour entrance as a grim reminder of the risks they take.
my.kwic.com/~pagodavista/erie.htm
_DSF3881
Happy Gorgeous Green Thursday!! Thought I would remind everyone that spring will soon be here!!
All rights reserved
Just when you think you've found a quiet spot to celebrate the end of a terrific day, there is seemingly in the middle of nowhere, a reminder that others have been there before and probably enjoyed it just as much as you did. I would rather have the pretense of being the first but then it did make for a more interesting photo.
"If we'd never met, I think I would have known that my life wasn't complete. And I would have wandered the world in search of you, even if I didn't know who I was looking for."
-The Longest Ride